Classification of colorectal cancer based on correlation of clinical, morphological and molecular features
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Abstract
Over the last 20 years it has become clear that colorectal cancer (CRC) evolves through multiple pathways. These pathways may be defined on the basis of two molecular features: (i) DNA microsatellite instability (MSI) status stratified as MSI-high (MSI-H), MSI-low (MSI-L) and MS stable (MSS), and (ii) CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) stratified as CIMP-high, CIMP-low and CIMP-negative (CIMP-neg). In this review the morphological correlates of five molecular subtypes are outlined: Type 1 (CIMP-high/MSI-H/BRAF mutation), Type 2 (CIMP-high/MSI-L or MSS/BRAF mutation), Type 3 (CIMP-low/MSS or MSI-L/KRAS mutation), Type 4 (CIMP-neg/MSS) and Type 5 or Lynch syndrome (CIMP-neg/MSI-H). The molecular pathways are…
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Microsatellite instability
- KRAS
- Colorectal cancer
- Biology
- Lynch syndrome
- Cancer
- Mutation
- Cancer research
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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